Archaeological Museum in Zagreb
Arheološki muzej u Zagrebu | |
File:Arheološki muzej Zagreb.jpg
Museum building, located in Zagreb city centre
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Established | 1836 |
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Location | 19 Nikola Šubić Zrinski Square, Zagreb, Croatia |
Coordinates | Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. |
Type | Archaeology museum |
Key holdings | Liber Linteus Zagrabiensis Lumbarda Psephisma |
Website | amz |
The Archaeological Museum (Croatian: Arheološki muzej u Zagrebu) in Zagreb, Croatia is an archaeological museum with over 450,000 varied artifacts and monuments, gathered from various sources but mostly from Croatia and in particular from the surroundings of Zagreb.[1]
Its predecessor institution was the "National Museum", open to the public since 1846. It was renamed to "State Institute of Croatia, Slavonia, and Dalmatia" in 1866. In 1878, the Archaeological Department became an independent institution within the State Institute, and the umbrella institute was dissolved in 1939, leaving the Archaeological Museum as a standalone institution. The archaeological collection of the State Institute had been kept in the Academy mansion at Zrinski Square from the 1880s and remained there until 1945, when the museum moved to its current location at the 19th-century Vranyczany-Hafner mansion, 19 Zrinski Square.
The museum consists of five main sections: Prehistory, Egypt, Antiquity, Middle Ages, Coins and Medals.
The section "Prehistory" contains 78,000 objects, ranging from the Paleolithic to the Late Iron Age. The section "Egypt" displays about 600 objects in the permanent exhibition. The section "Antiquity" contains an important collection of Greek vases (about 1,500 vessels) and stones with inscriptions. The Roman Antiquity is represented by many statues, military equipment, metal objects, Roman religion and art and objects from everyday life, acquired through systematic archaeological excavations in various Croatian regions in many Croatian cities founded during the Roman Empire. The numismatic section is among the largest collections of this type in Europe.
Some of the famous artifacts include:
- Vučedol dove, a flagon shaped as a bird
- Liber Linteus, 3rd century BCE mummy and bandages with the longest Etruscan inscription in existence
- Lumbarda Psephisma, 4th century BCE stone inscription detailing the founding of an ancient Greek colony on the island of Korčula
Gallery
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Croatian Apoxyomenos Louvre n06.jpg
Croatian Apoxyomenos, statue of an athlete scraping himself
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Antička zbirka.JPG
References
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External links
- No URL found. Please specify a URL here or add one to Wikidata. (Croatian) (English)
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- Pages with broken file links
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- Articles containing Croatian-language text
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- Articles with Croatian-language external links
- Archaeological museums in Croatia
- Museums established in 1846
- Museums in Zagreb
- Donji grad
- 1846 establishments in the Austrian Empire
- European museum stubs
- Croatian building and structure stubs
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